Vote to see vote counts
Rep. Tim Burchett shared a story of a military officer witnessing a large craft and jets while fishing, emphasizing the ongoing nature of such sightings and the lack of serious investigation.
Rep. Tim Burchett shared that more people believe in UFOs than believe in Congress, and for good reason. This sentiment resonated widely, leading to a highly attended congressional hearing on the topic.
Rep. Tim Burchett recounted a story from a former Navy colleague who witnessed a massive, cylindrical UFO while unloading a nuclear missile from a submarine in the late 1950s. The object was described as two city blocks wide, made no noise, and left no vapor trail.
Rep. Tim Burchett criticized the lack of transparency regarding UAPs, highlighting that sworn testimonies exist of people seeing beings and crafts, but these are often suppressed by the media.
Rep. Tim Burchett recounts how scientists visited him in Tennessee to show evidence of aircraft performing maneuvers beyond current technological capabilities, raising questions about the nature of these sightings.
Rep. Tim Burchett claims that the U.S. government has compartmentalized information about UFOs, making it difficult to obtain through Freedom of Information Act requests. He suggests that the information has been passed to five or six corporations with quasi-governmental connections, complicating transparency.
Rep. Tim Burchett highlights the paradox in government spending on UFO investigations. Despite claiming UFOs don't exist, various agencies, including NASA and the FBI, allocate funds to study them, driven by public opinion polls showing over half the country believes something is happening.
Rep. Tim Burchett argues that the UFO phenomenon is the biggest story in human history, questioning whether we are alone in the universe. He asserts that whatever is being seen in the skies is not of Russian, Chinese, or American origin, as none of these nations would keep such technology secret.